On a 4 string bass, the order in standard rock/blues tuning high to low would be E,A,D,G.
e,b,g,d,a,E on a six string guitar
B G E e D A
On a six string guitar in standard tuning it's the second string or the next one over from the (thinnest) high e. The strings from low to high are EADGBE.
It depends on where the six strings are. If they are all equally spaced, it is essentially a guitar or a taro patch. If the top and bottom strings are doubled up, you have a high and a low G and a high and a low A.
Normally a 12 string is just 6 pairs of strings. The guitar can be tuned normally EADGBE (low to high) and the smaller strings of the pairs tuned an octave higher than their mate. Except the high E string which is in unison because the high "E"s are the same gauge string. Then it should play like a 6 string guitar.
Standard tuning for a six string guitar is (low to high) EAGDBe. More strings offer more notes. A 7-string guitar, for example, is BEADGBe.
No it's not. It is 5 steps (frets) lower than the usual low E. Some 5 strings have a high B added. That would be tuned 5 steps above open G. A 5 string isn't the only way to get a low B. I just restringed my bass to BEAD. Still 4 strings so the neck is narrow, but I gave up the G string for the low B.
Strings for a Guitar- E or 6th string (low pitched, thickest string) A or 5th string D or 4th string G or 3rd string B or 2nd string E or 1st string (high pitched, thinnest string)
On a six string guitar in standard tuning it's the second string or the next one over from the (thinnest) high e. The strings from low to high are EADGBE.
It depends on where the six strings are. If they are all equally spaced, it is essentially a guitar or a taro patch. If the top and bottom strings are doubled up, you have a high and a low G and a high and a low A.
Normally a 12 string is just 6 pairs of strings. The guitar can be tuned normally EADGBE (low to high) and the smaller strings of the pairs tuned an octave higher than their mate. Except the high E string which is in unison because the high "E"s are the same gauge string. Then it should play like a 6 string guitar.
Standard tuning for a six string guitar is (low to high) EAGDBe. More strings offer more notes. A 7-string guitar, for example, is BEADGBe.
Banduria is tuned (from high to low): G (3 strings in unison) D (3 strings in unison) A (3 strings in unison) E (2 strings in unison) B (2 strings in unison) F# (1 string)
Only the 2 higher pitched strings are doubled, (high E, B). The first string of the lower pitched strings are normal, with the double string being a lighter gauge to facilitate an octave higher tuning. This method repeats itself for the Low E, A, D, & G strings.
string 1 = high E (highest pitch, thinnest string, closest to ground) string 2 = B string 3 = G string 4 = D string 5 = A string 6 = low E (lowest pitch, thickest string, closest to ceiling)
No it's not. It is 5 steps (frets) lower than the usual low E. Some 5 strings have a high B added. That would be tuned 5 steps above open G. A 5 string isn't the only way to get a low B. I just restringed my bass to BEAD. Still 4 strings so the neck is narrow, but I gave up the G string for the low B.
Standard tuning is E-A-D-G-B-e. The names goes as follows. First pick up the guitar as if you were going to play it. The string closest to the ground is called the high E string, or the first string (it is the thinnest) The string above this one is called the B string or the second string The string above this one is called the Gstring or the third string The next one above is called the D string or the fourth string The next one above is called the A string or the fifth string The highest string is called the low E string or the sixth string. (it is the thickest)
Starting with the thickest string, it goes E, A, D, G, B, E.
It's the tension of the strings in Superstring Theory. The tension refers to the ability of a string to vibrate at high or low frequencies, which is responsible for the energies of particles.